On Sun, Jan 14, 2018 at 01:18:35PM +0200, Karim Eshapa wrote: > >> Use pointers to structure as arguments to function instead of coping > >> structures and less stack size. Also transfer TNUM(_v, _m) to > >> tnum.h file to be used in differnet files for creating anonymous structures > >> statically. > >> > >> Signed-off-by: Karim Eshapa <karim.esh...@gmail.com> > ... > >> +/* Statically tnum constant */ > >> +#define TNUM(_v, _m) (struct tnum){.value = _v, .mask = _m} > >> /* Represent a known constant as a tnum. */ > >> struct tnum tnum_const(u64 value); > >> /* A completely unknown value */ > >> @@ -26,7 +28,7 @@ struct tnum tnum_lshift(struct tnum a, u8 shift); > >> /* Shift a tnum right (by a fixed shift) */ > >> struct tnum tnum_rshift(struct tnum a, u8 shift); > >> /* Add two tnums, return @a + @b */ > >> -struct tnum tnum_add(struct tnum a, struct tnum b); > >> +void tnum_add(struct tnum *res, struct tnum *a, struct tnum *b); > ... > >> - reg_off = tnum_add(reg->var_off, tnum_const(ip_align + reg->off + > >> off)); > >> + tnum_add(®_off, ®->var_off, &TNUM(ip_align + reg->off + off, > >> 0)); > >> if (!tnum_is_aligned(reg_off, size)) { > >> char tn_buf[48]; > >> > >> @@ -1023,8 +1023,7 @@ static int check_generic_ptr_alignment(struct > >> bpf_verifier_env *env, > >> /* Byte size accesses are always allowed. */ > >> if (!strict || size == 1) > >> return 0; > >> - > >> - reg_off = tnum_add(reg->var_off, tnum_const(reg->off + off)); > >> + tnum_add(®_off, ®->var_off, &TNUM(reg->off + off, 0)); > ... > >> - dst_reg->var_off = tnum_add(ptr_reg->var_off, > >> off_reg->var_off); > >> + tnum_add(&dst_reg->var_off, &ptr_reg->var_off, > >> + &off_reg->var_off); > > >Is it gnu or intel style of argumnets ? where is src or dest ? > >Can the same pointer be used as src and as dst ? etc, etc > >I don't think it saves stack either. > >I'd rather leave things as-is. > > It's not specific style but it's recommended when passing structure specially > if > the structures have large sizes. > and (dest, src0, src1) respectively.Although tnum structure isn't large but > it saves > stack,we have 2 structure passed before calling and 1 returned to receive the > return value.
1. your patch has compile time warnings 2. it doesn't reduce stack size. For two functions that use tnum_add: adjust_ptr_min_max_vals() before and after has exactly the same. check_ptr_alignment() after your patch _increased_ stack size. 3. text of verifier.o shrank 133 bytes while tnum.o increased 198 Please do your homework next time. tnum code will stay as-is.